animefreak_usa wrote...
I think it on all legal printed hentai books. I can't say if it makes a difference. If a cop or DA wants to arrest you or charge you with obscenity they will, just getting a conviction is the hard part with any content. The govt tried to get a real porn producer with child porn even though all the actors were over 18, but there portraying under age girls. Any law enforcement can charge you with anything, just getting a judge or jury to believe you committed a crime is the question.
I don't think fangroups do since they can't since they don't own the right to do anything with pirated content. The original drawing by the artist might or might not.
Thanks for the reassurance. For stuff that's not officially licensed in the States and doesn't have the age disclaimer, would they still be okay to view and/or possess? i.e. stuff you see on Pixiv, rule34 imageboards, reddit, etc.
kunoichi069 wrote...
If you're in California, you're clear. Look at code 311.11.
http://www.shouselaw.com/child-pornography-crimes.html
1.5. PC 311.11 possessing child pornography
Finally, Penal Code 311.11 PC makes it a crime simply to knowingly possess or control child pornography—as long as the production of the pornographic material involved the use of a person under 18.22
Example: Aaron has on his computer a large number of Japanese manga comics, in e-book form. Several of these comics contain explicit drawings of children engaged in sexual acts.
Aaron is not guilty of Penal Code 311.11 child pornography for having these comics, though—because no actual children were involved in their production.
That's a great reassurance, can't believe I've never discovered that before. So all in all, anything that's a fictional artwork is fair game (hentai, manga, 3DCG, games, etc), as long as it's not judged as obscene?